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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

I am not sure how much students are held to knowing about the Dewey Decimal system as part of the Library curriculum (it probably varies), but the system itself is an interesting use of abstract categorization, a skill that often eludes our students. Dewey Digger is a very cool visual and interactive look at the system, where a click will bring you to subcategories, then visual search results (I'd recommend going to Google Images at that stage). It would be a great way to build a lesson around advanced categorization, or naming items associated with a particular category (you'd need to have a specific plan rather than asking students to explore randomly) The initial page would also be a fun one to explore as sort of a "mystery" task- based on the images scrolling by, what do you think this category is?

Images on this main page continually change, leading to a nice predictive activity in itself

A view after clicking on "colonies," then Google Images, giving students a chance to verbalize some concepts associated with this word.

Finally, please check out today's post on the ADVANCE blog, the 3rd in a series about free tools from Google that make SLP's jobs easier. This post is about the Tasks feature that helps you maintain and organize a To-Do list(s) from anywhere, including your phone.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Do you work with high school or adult students and struggle to help them access curriculum? 60-Second Recaps is a great resource for you. The site provides a series of recaps for an ever-growing library of books commonly tackled by older students. The recaps, indeed 60 seconds in length, are narrated by Jenny, an engaging and humorous host, and organized by essential characteristics of the book- characters, themes, etc. Visuals throughout each recap support comprehension of the clip, and every effort is taken to relate the themes to the books to meaningful aspects of students' lives. Consider making a Facebook page for your intervention group- you don't have to "friend" students to interact with them on the page. You can share 60-Second Recaps on Facebook and perhaps facilitate some great discussion "homework" and home consultation.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Ricky Explores Antarctica is a blog written by a UK teacher who is getting ready to take an educational journey to Antarctica. Except...she is also taking a puppet named Ricky and blogging in primary-school-level language about the preparations and the trip. The blog welcomes young students to follow the exploration and submit questions. From the blog:

Not many people can experience life in the extreme environment of Antarctica. The ‘Ricky goes to Antarctica’ Project provides a wonderful opportunity to get a bit closer to that environment through the adventures of Ricky (with a bit of help from a teacher called Lisa Wood). Ricky has so much to do to get ready. He needs lots of help. While he is in Antarctica Ricky will carry out investigations and find answers to children’s questions about life in Antarctica. It’s an exciting and novel way to learn.

They are getting ready to go in November, so check it out. Beware there's a bit of British humour (I say that with the highest respect for our friends across the pond) and a post about Poo. Thank you to The Whiteboard Blog for featuring this resource.

Language Lens:

This site aligns well with and will provide an experiential approach to curriculum around geology, geography and weather.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Landform Detectives is a great curriculum-based game developed by Filament Games for National Geographic. The game involves looking at specific landforms (e.g. the Red Sea) and determining the geographic process and timeline that caused them to form. Great informational videos are delivered by Dr. Bob Ballard to guide you in making your decisions. Search the globe for the green circles- those indicate landforms that are unlocked for you to tackle. As you complete the landform (about a 5 minute process), more are unlocked.

Language Lens:

This activity aligns perfectly with abstract curriculum areas around Geology and Landforms. Rather than having to memorize landforms and vocabulary words, students operate on a higher level of thinking in order to analyze and even manipulate them. They are therefore more likely to remember the information about landforms, as it has been made meaningful.

Dr. Bob's video clips provide a great opportunity to use auditory comprehension strategies as students are guided toward the correct answer.

Friday, September 17, 2010

NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO... That's what I think about the approach (distant) of winter.

I'll say it again: NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO.

However, downloading this app today would definitely be a great move, like finding your holiday cards on sale in July. You may remember that back in the early summer, when life was full of promise, I featured the app Snow Globe Maker Beach. Snow Globe Maker Winter is another fun creative app for the iPhone/iPod Touch that allows you to create your own snow globe (choose automatic snow or shake away)! The winter theme has a particular focus on the categories of animals, weather, and the phases of the moon, so it would be helpful for students accessing those curriculum areas.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

The PBS Democracy Project site features some great interactives to visualize social studies concepts, particularly around Constitution Day.

The President for a Day activity allows students to assume the role of President and make decisions to plan his or her day. The activity lends itself well to using a graphic organizer to emphasize the text structure of sequence.

How Does Government Affect Me allows you to scroll around a town and view the interactions between government in our lives. This activity would result more in a list on a graphic organizer.

The website also allows you to register and create a sticker related to an issue. This was geared toward the 2008 election, but would still make a nice descriptive activity.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

iCivics is an incredibly rich and well designed site conceived by Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, who has been (rightly) concerned that civics is not well-taught in our schools because teachers lack effective materials (um, and time, Your Honor). iCivics features many simulations allowing students to make decisions from the perspective of government participants (e.g. attorneys arguing an issue before the Supreme Court), and I feel like I would like to revisit it and review specific simulations and their relation to language therapy. However, I wanted to put it out there as another resource relevant to Constitution Day. What is marvelous about it is that students are not asked to memorize facts and concepts about our government, but rather instantly apply those toward a learning experience that is likely to stay with them. The site is highly visual and allows students to click-drag and see the effects of their decisions. Take some time to explore iCivics, even as Constitution Day passes. Teachers have so little time to address these standards and they provide a great, meaningful context to address language goals.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Constitution Day is October 17. All classrooms (really not including you, necessarily, but it couldn't hurt) are required to conduct a lesson on the U.S. Constitution on that day. I really like working on concepts around government with students- it's a topic that is way abstract for them, but so functional and important to learn. Try starting with this classic available on YouTube- Three Ring Government:

Kids love Schoolhouse Rock videos- they are catchy and get stuck in their head, thereby utilizing some brain-based learning techniques. Kids think they are quaint but I totally remember watching them with my Saturday morning cereal.

A good follow-up to this activity would be a sorting or graphic-organizer-based lesson, or a wordsplash with some of the vocabulary and concepts in the clip. Here, also, is a good online sorting activity.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Thanks to Moms with Apps for hooking us all up with a bunch of free apps (in USA) this weekend. Please check out her full post to see all the wonderful free offerings, but I wanted to highlight a few that have particular potential for speech-language interventions.

Lula's Brew is a digital storybook with audio. This cute story would be great to grab now and use for some October interventions. The story lends itself to story grammar analysis (character-setting-problem/kickoff, etc) and identifying rhymes. Additionally, it begs to be followed up by making a "brew" recipe of some sort with your kids, which would be a great way to target sequential language and perhaps writing.

But That Wasn't the Best Part is also a digital/audio storybook describing a parade that keeps getting better and better. Bombardment with the word "but" as contained in the story will scaffold more complex sentence constructions in children with only simple sentence structure. The structure of the story could be replicated in another context to make a parallel story, such as gifts that keep getting better and better, or something! Given that the book ends with a pudding party, this also could be a good opportunity for a recipe.

My Little Suitcase is an adorable interactive app in which kids get to make choices about a travel destination and the contents of their suitcase. The last step involves an interaction with the setting of the journey, such as moving a lamp around the campsite to illuminate it. The selection of items along the way is a context to elicit temporal, causal, and descriptive language.

'Twas a time, SLPs, AT specialists, and support staff had to lobby for expensive software to be able to incorporate any word prediction software in students' programs. Now, Google uses the technology right in their search engine, showing you potentially relevant results as you type. Just go to your Google Search Page and check it out. Disclosure: I am NOT being paid by Google for any of these posts. I swear.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

I know from that title you might be picturing a circus act with plates a-spinning atop long poles, but no. The category "food" and food group subcategories are essential to students' descriptive skills and success within any health curricula. Food sorting and "balanced plate" activities abound, and allow students to click and drag pictures to categories that help them apply these skills.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

I love using humorous videos with kids in social thinking groups, seeing their reactions, and discussing what makes situations funny. I have to admit I was always on Team Conan, but Jay Leno's series of Funny Photo Booth videos got to me. The clips involved a photo booth set up at Universal Studios, with a comedian on site acting as a "computerized" voice to surprise participants in unexpected ways. Check one of them out:

Definitely more of a middle-school and up activity, based on what they could "get" and general appropriateness, but the videos lend themselves to all kinds of social thinking questions:
-What do people expect when they go into a photo booth?
-How does the comedian "think with her eyes" about each person? What clues do they give her that allow her to make the situation funny?
-What were the reactions like? What did their faces tell you? What would you do?
-Who has a "flexible" reaction to the booth? Who do you think was more rigid?

What other discussion questions can you think of, using the video as a context?

Friday, September 3, 2010

Please check out Moms with Apps today for a description of two great free apps available from the U.S. (I feel I need to qualify that after a Canadian reader- thanks Janelle- pointed out that a free app wasn't free there) iTunes store today, Friday, September 3.

Montessori Crosswords (only on iPad, sorry, and now that I have one I could test it out!) would be a great way to work on word naming, categorization, and phonemic awareness. The app's Moveable Alphabet activity would have all kinds of applications, including a fun, motivating way to present words for articulation practice.

The same developers, L'Escapadou, are also offering for free today their Draw with Stars app (also on iPhone/Touch). This app allows you a night sky canvas which you can use to draw anything, but with stars (spinning optional). Again, many applications for this in therapy, such as drawing items in a category or playing Pictionary. See- I drew pants! I don't know why...

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

I believe YouTube has enormous potential for instruction (hopefully your district does, too, and doesn't block it), but nothing annoys me more than when I take the time to locate a fun instructional video on YouTube, and while I am presenting it, student B says "OH, there's a link to ____, can we watch that too?" Even more annoying is when they consider having YouTube on screen as an invitation to suggest unrelated videos out of the blue. Gee, I am writing a lot here about being annoyed. I am sure none of my readers ever get annoyed by students...

A good solution to this...distraction is using something like ViewPure, which allows you to present YouTube videos "without comments, suggestions, or the other things." Simply copy/paste the URL location of the video (the web address at the top of your window when the video is playing on YouTube), and ViewPure will give you a new URL and screen that shows only that video, like this example.

Even better, ViewPure has a bookmarklet button you can drag up to your bookmarks bar in your browser, and it will "Purify" any YouTube video you would like, without having to navigate to ViewPure and cut/paste, etc.

Search SpeechTechie

Questions, Comments, etc?

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